Ten years after the end of the siege of Sarajevo, during which the Bosnian capital endured almost four years of continuous shelling and sniper attacks, the BBC's Neil Arun finds out how life has changed for survivors.

Esad Pozder is concerned about the future of Sarajevo

Cabbages saved Esad Pozder's life. The 65-year-old trader had ducked behind his stall to retrieve some of the vegetables when a mortar sailed into Sarajevo's open-air marketplace.

The explosion killed the friend who had asked Esad for the cabbages.

It killed Esad's sister, who ran a stall selling trinkets, and more than 60 other people - casualties of the single biggest atrocity during the siege of Sarajevo, which ended 10 years ago.

"I couldn't hear anything after the blast," Esad says. "But I saw it all - the dead, the injured, their limbs and organs scattered everywhere.

"We rushed the injured to hospital, packed into cars and vans. In the frenzy, we picked up whatever we could find - not just people but parts of people too."